NY, NJ officials vow to improve extreme weather resilience as Ida death
toll rises to 46
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[September 04, 2021]
By Maria Caspani and Julia Harte
NEW YORK (Reuters) -Officials in New York
and New Jersey said on Friday that improvements to infrastructure were
needed to deal with extreme weather events after flash flooding from
Hurricane Ida caught the U.S. Northeast off guard, killing at least 46
people.
Ida struck the Gulf coast Sunday as a Category 4 storm and marched
northward through the eastern United States, culminating in
high-intensity rains and fast-rising floods in Pennsylvania, New Jersey,
Connecticut and New York on Wednesday night.
Thousands of people were stranded in their homes or cars and rescued by
emergency responders or neighbors in rafts and life boats. Many are now
coping with water-logged basements, power outages and damaged roofs as
officials assess the damage.
On Friday New York Governor Kathy Hochul said that people should expect
extreme weather to occur with increasing frequency - a phenomenon
scientists have for years been attributing to global warming and climate
change - and that government needed take more aggressive action to save
lives.
"Some people have called this a 500-year event. I don't buy it," said
Hochul. "No longer will we say, that won't happen again in our lifetime.
This could literally happen next week."
Officials have confirmed 16 fatalities in New York, 25 in New Jersey,
four in Pennsylvania and the death of a state trooper in Connecticut.
Hochul said deaths from Ida have shown the weaknesses in the state's
disaster notification system, including a lack of notifications in
different languages. She added that a portion of New York's population
might not own a cellphone, making them particularly vulnerable during
dangerous weather events.
Hochul also pointed to mass flooding in New York City's subways that was
captured in videos shared widely on social media. She announced a task
force to evaluate the response to Ida and come up with measures to
address shortcomings.
"For those who live in New York City in particular, it's about building
more resiliency around those subways," Hochul said. "I don't ever want
to again see Niagara Falls rushing down the stairs in one of the New
York City subways."
New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio on Friday announced a series of
initiatives to tackle extreme weather events, including a more
aggressive use of travel bans to get residents off the street ahead of a
storm and evacuations to help people living in vulnerable spaces like
basement apartments.
De Blasio estimated there were tens of thousands of basement apartments
in the city in violation of building codes.
"We are now going to be speaking to people living in basement apartments
- specific messages, specific cell phone alerts - telling people about
the vulnerabilities they face in this kind of rain events," de Blasio
told a news conference.
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People queue at an information booth in Grand Central Terminal after
multiple train lines were canceled due to Tropical Storm Ida in
Manhattan, New York City, U.S., September 3, 2021. REUTERS/Andrew
Kelly
FEDERAL AID
President Joe Biden was scheduled to travel to Louisiana on Friday
to meet with Governor John Bel Edwards and survey damage wrought by
Ida, which left residents there scrambling for water, food and basic
services, with more than 800,000 households still without power.
The hurricane, which made landfall in Louisiana on Sunday, may
ultimately claim more lives in the Northeast, where flash flooding
caught residents off guard, causing some to perish in their
basements and others to drown in their cars.
Multiple homes and a banquet hall in Manville, New Jersey, burned to
the ground after igniting on Thursday night and early Friday
morning, according to local news reports. Drone footage posted on
social media on Thursday by a local fire monitoring service showed
one house on fire next to the rubble of a burned-down building,
surrounded by flood waters that made it impossible for fire trucks
to reach the area.
New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy acknowledged that his state has "a
lot more work to do" on climate resilience, although he stressed
that some steps have already been taken, including $1.5 billion
investments in water infrastructure over the past three years and
$22 million earmarked for flood-resilience projects.
"That's really good progress but it's quite clear we have a lot more
work to do," Murphy told a news conference in Millburn, a suburban
town west of Newark that was hit hard by flooding. "This was a
deadly and dangerous storm and we continue to face its
after-effects."
Murphy announced $10 million in state grants to help small
businesses hit by the storm and echoed Hochul in flagging expected
federal assistance in the form of funds and equipment after Biden
approved an emergency declarations for both states.
(Reporting by Maria Caspani in New York, Julia Harte in Washington
and Nathan Layne in Wilton, Connecticut; Editing by Dan Grebler)
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